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If you live in a city, there is something quite special about waking up on Good Friday - to the sound of silence.
There are no cars on the road, no hum of traffic in the distance, no sound of people going about their day-to-day routines. My first thought on Friday was - it鈥檚 like Christmas Day. My second thought wasn鈥檛 as pleasant - it鈥檚 like lockdown. But the feeling was the same - how nice the world is when it pauses for a moment.
But as much as I appreciate these few days a year when many get to stop, the crazy rush, chock-a-block carparks and supermarkets on Thursday and Saturday made me wonder whether it鈥檚 worth it.
We don鈥檛 seem to be able to cope, or prepare, for supermarkets to shut. If we weren鈥檛 down on hot cross buns, I certainly wouldn鈥檛 have made the trip to my local. It鈥檚 lovely having Friday and Sunday off, but not, if the days around it are a nightmare.
We have been talking about the inconsistencies and confusion around retail laws over Easter for as long as I can remember. What is open and shut depends on where you are in the country; sometimes where you are in a city. Don鈥檛 forget it鈥檚 the local authority which decides whether stores can open or not.
It depends on what you鈥檙e selling. There are strange restrictions on what can be sold, and you must be selling something that people can鈥檛 put off buying until the next day. But you can get a haircut. And just to make it even more confusing - the Shop Trading Hours Act covers both public holidays, and days that aren鈥檛 public holidays, such as Easter Sunday.
I think it鈥檚 time to let people decide for themselves how they want to spend their Easter. Whether they open their businesses, work or shop, or do none of the above and quietly go about their day.
We鈥檝e been arguing forever the merits of a day off and people being able to spend time with family and friends, or businesses being able to make the most of people wanting to spend money and get jobs done.
We have spoken about employees facing pressure from their employers to work over Easter when they would prefer not to. And how there are plenty of employees who would happily take the benefits of working a public holiday.
Let鈥檚 not forget online retailers can sell you whatever they like on these days.
What a minefield of confusion. Let鈥檚 just bite the bullet, simplify the laws, make sure employees are protected, and let businesses decide if they open or not, and get on like it鈥檚 2025 and not 1990.
I鈥檓 also pleased sense is being shown around the purchase of alcohol over Easter. Labour MP Kieran McAnulty鈥檚 Bill to change rules around alcohol sales on ANZAC Day morning, Good Friday, Easter Sunday, and Christmas was voted through its first reading a week or so ago.
Currently, people must order a meal before having an alcoholic beverage at a restaurant or pub. Once again, it鈥檚 all about simplifying the rules for both hospo, tourists, and Kiwis catching up at a restaurant over the holiday period.
And there are a lot of businesses who would appreciate it being simpler to make a buck.
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